To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Chicago examiner vcl xl no 183 a m wednesday Chicago iuly 23 1913 wednesday registered in it s patent otlice price one cen 1 â„¢~-Â£ *Â£â€¢Â». kenwood bank pays off 1,100 depositors and ends run officers cash all orders for money promise to open doors early to-day to resume turn ing over mcney to customers deposits continue to come in following rumor of collapse and public is assured that savings are not in danger alarmed hy rumors from an unltnown ouree depositors started a run on the kenwood trust & savings bank ut grand boulevard and east forty-seventh street yesterday which lasted until after bank ing hours and kept the streets al'out the bank congested ucitil far into the night the run was met with every confidence by the bank's officers they iald every man or wouiau who presented a pass book kept the bank open until alter hours to leeoaiuiodate as many as possi ble and when the doors closed at 4:15 eveiy person tueu inside was paid bank will open to-day assurance was given to those on the outside tbat the bank will open thts morning at 9 and that every depositor will be paid in full wi.hout hesitation the faith of the otficers in the solidity 1,1 lhe bank is shown by the fact tbat ! they kept an accepting deposits up to the j closing hour though it is a felony to ac ' cept u deposit fo an insolvent hank one of tbj last transactions of the day vvas tle acceptance of a deposit of io.('cÂ«j i.'.v the liordeu condensed milk company the bank bas about 12.041 depositors whose deposits aggrega e more than fi i kio.uoo uf tnese about 1,100 mostly women withdrew their deposits yester day amounting in round numbers lo tl'itl , '**>â€¢ in business eight years the kenwood trust & savings hank is a state institution and has been in | business for eight years the officers j are itesident a k brown vice presi ; deut s a fowler cashier r c kent assistant cashier k e staebling in its last report issuea juue 5 1913 the bank's affairs stood thus resources â€” loans and discounts j1r9621044 stocks and bonds 151 275 ofj 'â– cash due from banks 426,'508!43 ' Â„ ..,.., 2,474,293 87 iliml-tie â€” | paid in capital stock Â« 200.000.00 , buplus and uudmded profits 101 sit is deposits 2.172.4.-.7 87 2,474,203 87 i there is absolutely no reason for this run said president brown last night ; and we have no way to explain bow it ; started received anonymous messages many of our depositors tell us that la the last few days they bave received ! anonymous telephone messages warning tbem tbat the bank was unsafe and that they had better withdraw their money we bave done our best but we have been unable to trace these messages tbat ts a danger which til banks face at all times but we will he open ln the morning at 9 o'clock and we will pay every depositor who makes a dernaud for his money we held a meeting of the directors ; to-night just to give them formal notice that there bas been a run and to ask if they have any criticism or suggestion in regard to the manner in which we are , meeting it they are perfectly satisfied with everything we have done and we are ready now to meet every demand other rumors started there were other rumors than that of the telephone messages afloat one was that a man opened an account witb a check for 3,500 and in a few hours tried to draw i.ooo on it and was refused until the check should have been found good the story was that he went out and spread the report that the bank bud sus j pended payments but cashier kent says j the rumor is unfounded still another rumor was tbat one of i the directors had tried to draw out more : money than the o er ofdeers would al ! low and had then started a rumor tbat the bank was unsafe this story i'resl i dent brown himself says is utterly un i tra all preparations have been made to ac ' commodate as many depositors as may be afraid this morning says cashier kent at thirty minutes notice any time we can have anywhere from 3,(xk),0u0 to jn.000.000 nt our disposal among others the continental & commercial national and the fort dearborn nation l have offered us all the help we may waul they know there is no question aoout om solidity ruth werner the pretty actress and dr otto goldfeld who for love of her gave up his lieuten ancy in the kaiser's army and enlisted in the u s cav alry man 110 years old to-day aurora 111 july 22 james moran a farmer wbo lives a short distance rrom thia place is 110 years old to-morrow i ba la hale and hearty women save mayor in recall election attempt to depose chief execut've of janesville fails by small vote janesville wis july 22 mayor james a fathers was the victor by a narrow margin to-day in wisconsin's first recall electiou of importance uuder the commission form of goverumeut he was elected by 98 votes with a total of over 3,000 votes east more than were ever before voted in a janesville municipal election xiayor fathers received 1,570 votes and his opponent john c nichols 1.47 2 fathers carried three wards the first second and third those chiefly occupied by the church and aristocratic elements while nichols carried the fourth ami fifth wards the homes of the poorer people the election follows the trouble over saloons six mouths ago wheu the fa thers administration started a campa'gu to clean up the town every ward in i the city was canvassed by women's com i mittees in the interest of fathers cousins of czar in automobile wreck grand dukes dimitri and cyril held till da-nage is paid snnclal cnme to tlia examiner copenhagen july 22.-the grand dukes dimitri and cyril cousins of the czar motoring in jutland way collided at high speed with a butcher's cart which was overturned injuring several of the occupants the hakes who were accompanied by two other automobiles carrying several russian and german nobles drove on but the party was stopped at the german frontier and permitted to proceed only on payment of 25 or damages romance leads to heir's exile from germany lieutenant in kaiser's army comes to Chicago and joins u s cavalry spent 32,000 in year ___ __ dr goldfeld forced by father to give up as suitor of pretty actress because his love for a pretty german actress resulted in his squandering an inheritance of 31,000 ln one year pr otto gordon goldfeld scon of a wealthy family a lieutenant in the german cav alry and a graduate of gottingen i'niver sity was forced by his father to come to lhe united states and join the army here as a private the young german leaves for the st louis barracks this morning ruth werner german dancer and singer charmed the young man when in vienna his grandfather bad just died and left him 32,000 within a year this was gone and after numerous appeals i to his father dr goldfeld was cut off and forced to come to f he united slates his father wbo is the vice president of the corporat'on of hamburg told him to give up the girl nis commission in j the army and come to america when dr goldfeld walked into the i federal building yetterday and said he i wanted to enlist in the cavalry be created i quite a stir he wore a neat blue suit i a white alpine hat and with a monocle | white chamois gloves and a light bamboo i walking stick gave the officials quite | a surprise tells of his love i fell in love with the girl explained prl'ate goldfeld last evening and spent all my money on ber she was beautiful if she wanted jewels 1 bought jewels we were ut monre carlo she wanted to pity the games she was beautiful and i loved ter sct"vvr"y sliuuld sbe not be hap.iv we were in paris at the horse show in london and many other places she had automobiles and fine horses and then my money gave out my parents refused to gice me more and my father forced me to come to the united states and try for a commission in th army will i go back responded dr gold feld in answer to a question yes when i get my commission here i will uo back anrl the girl and i will be married but not in til then i must stay in the army here cnlil 1 am a lieutenant it's the open air and oenut'ful country 1 like here more than anything else that s why 1 have come to the west praise for u s soldiers and your soldiers well next to the french dragoons they are about the best iu the world iu my . p'nlon and i have seen the troops of all the larger countries that's why i am enlisting as a private 'â€¢ here for i like the life and will stay anyway until i get my naturalization papers goldfeld is twenty-five years old and has served the last four years in the german cavalry as a lieutenant he is an experienced horseman and says he was the winner of the championship at the international horse show held ln lou don two years ago rid'.ng the horses from bis father's stables jacob goldfeld father of the young army officer besides being vice president of the hamburg corporation is a well known german jurist as i3 also his brother rudolph goldfeld dr go'dfeld will be sent to the govern ment barracks in st ouls this morning as he passed the recruiting officer's ex aminat'on yesterday robbers slay man who tries to save couple jehiel jenner is killed when he runs to rescue of highway men's victims tragedy near lake drive shots attract Chicago avenue firemen efforts to capture bandits are in vain while hurrying to the rescue of a couple wbo had been held up by two ban dits jehiel jenner was fatally shot last night by the highwaymen in the baseball park at east Chicago avenue and the outer drive two bullets passed through the victim one above the other just be low the heart he died twenty m'nntes after he was taken to the policlinic hos pital the couple ln whose behalf jen ner's life was sacrificed were miss vir ginia markham of 17 west huron street and james cleary of 932 la salle avenue resist highwaymen they were walking through the play ground when two young men sprang from behind a tree and ordered them to throw up their hands the young woman obeyed but cleary refused whereupon one of the men struck him on the month with the butt of a revolver knock'ng him down and dislodging a number of his front teeth miss markham screamed it was the scream tbat attracted jenner he had been dozing on one of the benches and he arose to his feet and ran toward the group not more than fifty feet away from him the highwaymen saw him coming and took deliberate aim two shots rung out in quick succession the moment they were fired the two bandits ran north on lake shore drive and disappeared shots attract fireman the souud of the shots and the screams of miss markham were heard in the fire house or engine company 98 in east chicaio avenue assistant chief arthur seyferlich brother of the fire marshal and a dozen firemen followed the sounds and found miss markham bending over the unconscious form of jenner cleary was lying nearby in a dazed and half conscious condition a police ambulance was called and the wounded man hurried to the hospital but in vain miss markham and cleary were taken to the emergency hospital of the east Chicago avenue station where cleary's injuries were dressed and the story nf the attack obtained lieutenant cullinan sent out detectives to scour the park and search the lake shore drive and though twenty arrests were made in the next hour the bandits were not among them the police believe they are the same bandits wbo attacked and beat thomas kinarisba of 672 dearborn aveuue in the baseball park several days ago jenner until there days ago was em ployed hy the schnaack watch service west Chicago avenue and north frank lin street in one of his pockets was found memorandum reading in case of wident notify my mother mrs c li hogmlre ridgefield wash the police sent a wire fo her last night nelson bennett dead west's road builder former partner of senator clark leader n development tacoma wash july 22 nelson ben nett who iliiii suddenly today aged sev enty was the pacific northwest's fore most railroad builder in 1888 be finished the northern pa ilfic's stamped 1 tunnel netting hlui b*llllo 000 ln 18 be owned the tacomu ledger ami the hotel tacoma lie losl everything in the panic and started anew lie hauled the first ma chinery tutu untte was senator clark's partner in freighting and built the first treat railways at butte and tacoma lie>sidfÃŸ being idterested iu much other development he bit a fortune estimated at ii half million dollars sues for 200,000 godair left typist mother alleges stenographer used undue imluenc over son st loi'ik july 22 mrs harriet a tlodnlr wife of w h godalr of chi cago and toother o arthur u godalr a commission merchant killed in an auto mobile accident 111 rch 1 filed suit to day asking that his will in which he left a large part of a 20i>,0go estate to his stenographer miss irene a gormley be set aside his wife received only a small share she alleges the stenographer used undue influence over bim too many kisses and buns discourage wife mrs schwanke says she loves them but they're monotonous kisses and buns for breakfast kisses and buns for tea but too man kisses and too many buns will end in monotony baltimore md june 22.-kisses and buns for breakfast kisses and buns for luncheon kisses and buns for dinner this has been the menu says mrs bosie schwanke ever since ber marriage to frederick schwanke ou july 7 mrs schwanke is the sister of mrs theresa deems the famous unklssed wife it's not that i don't love my husband said mrs schwanke 1 do and love bis kisses too but buns are too monoto nous schwanke will be given a hearing to morrow marine guard asked for chinese resort ! diplomat at peking wants u s detachment at kuling washington july 22,-edward t williams the american charge d affaires at peking has asked admiral nicholson commanding the united states asiatic fleet to send a marine guard to kuling the foreign summer resort in central china his request indicates that mr williams is carrying out a joint policy similar to the international agreeinent by which about olie hundred marines form part of an international gi'trd at peking it is expected that admiral nicholson will send from twenty-five to forty ma rines as it is evident that mr williams helieves that there should be no reduc tion of the marine guard at peking london hears t r is to go in vaudeville sketch prints he is to get 2,000 a week for lectures special cable to the examiner london july 28 the london daily sketch prints a statement that colonel roosevelt bus signed a contract for a tour of the australian vaudeville ci.i-uit at 2 oug a week to lecture on sociological subjects he hits been booked by hugh mcln osh the noted australian fight pro moter it adtls the former president is to appear n talks of fifteen to thirty minutes new york july 22 dr i.ymiiu ab liclt when asked tc night about this re port said vou may be sure this is absolute nonsense kit carson arrested for deserting wife son of pioneer scout who killed mother-in-law in trouble la junta colo july a.'.-kit carson aon of the well-known pioneer scout of tbat name was arrested yesterday for wife desertion he left his wife and tive children all under sixteen years of age three weeks ago ten years ago carson shot and killed his mother-in-law mrs j h richardson and wounded bis father in-law the case was thrown out because three terms of court bad been allowed to pass without auy action belug taken anthony brady is dead financier succumbs after illness in london hotel special cable to the e aminer london july 22 anthony n brady the widely known american financier and for years head of the brooklyn rapid transit company in xew york died at the carlton hotel bert late to-night mr b.idj was more tbac ieveotj jeara old union trainmen win arbitration on erie president underwood announces agreement to abide by decision new york july 22 the 82,000 union conductors and trainmen on the eastern railroads who are fighting for a 20 per cent increase in wages won a signal vic tory to-day when the management of the erie ra.lroad agreed to abide by the decision of the proposd board of arbitra tion the mediators informed vice president j c stewart of the erie that they saw no way of averting the big strike unless the management of the road would make the coucessiou concerning arbitration de manded by the uuious to-night the mediators were informed tbat the follow ing dispatch had been received from i'resident underwood the erie railroad will accept any award made under the newlands act in case an advance iu wages in granted the erie purposes to ask the employes to defer the effective date until january 1 1915 signed f d underwood when a b garretson and w u lee the union leaders learned of the conces sions made by president underwood tbey issued this joint statement sue-h au arrangement is highly satis factor yto us rebates by allowances on tap-line roads to be abolished fifty to one hundred million dol-i lars will be added to revenues of railroads by decision will obviate rate increase necessity interstate commerce commission will refuse to grant raise in rates to issue order that will strip trusts of special favors washington july 22 the answer of the interstate commerce commission to the appmcation of the railroads east of the mississippi ard north of the ohio and potomac rivers for per mission to make a general increase of 5 per cent in freight rates will be as follows 1 the application will be denied 2 all railroads will be ordered to discontinue making allowances to certain favored big industrial combinations the effect of this will be to re lieve the general public of the neces sity of paying the additional 42 000,000 a year which the railroads in official classification territory are asking for arid to strip certain big corporations of a sum ranging be tween 150,000,000 and 100,000,000 annually may not prosecute the necessity of such an order has been under consideration by the commission for some time during the past few months it has secretly made an investigation to determine i just the extent to which the practice of making allowances to indus trial short line railroads owned by manufacturing concerns is prevalent it is now in possession of the names of the firms that receive these allowances or rebates or dis criminatory rates and in addition it has the names of the railroads that pay them the amounts re ceived by the favored industrial cor porations and something of the ex tent to which the practice injures the competing manufacturers who are not in a position to enter into such arrangements ln a large number of instances it is claimed the practice amounts to extortion the railroads aie com pelled by the deniuiuis of compea tion to make allowances to the tnau uiacturer for his part iu transfer ring his product over his own iu siguificant trackage to the junction wneie the regular railitmu lakes up his cars 17,000,000 for increase where several raiirouus an bid ding for such a manufacturer's business the one which makes iiie most liberal allowance usually gÂ»ts the freight ln view mainly of this fact it is ejspectul that the answer which the commission will give the railroads application will meet with their ap proval and co-operation and will do away with the most important of ex isting improper practices in the rail road dusiness without the necessity of prose ution the railroads are asking for the 5 per cent increase on the ground that they must have increased rev enue to pay their large operating ex penses and particularly to pay the higher wages demanded by their em ployes â€” a demand which almost pre cipitated a paralyzing strike a few days ago and which is now being arbitrated under a special act of con gress in rough figures the 5 per cent increase asked by the railroads in the territory east of Chicago would add 42,000,000 to their rev enue the recent demands of their em ployes for wages equal to those paid railroad workmen in the western and southern territory would take 17 000,(100 of that amount under the order which the inter j state commerce commission will ia 1 statistics and facts of fatal factory fire known dead 24 missing and believed to be in ruins 26 identified dead white mary thirty four years old both legs broken and inter nally injured died at hospital fulmer ellen twen ty-three years old fa tally burned died in hospital property loss â€” 300000 is estimated as damage aone to binghamton clothing company and adjoining buildings cause â€” gasoline stored under the only stairway in the build ing is one theory as to how fire started responsibility â€” too fre quent fire drills are blamed for heavy loss of life the girls thinking the alarm yes terday was a joke foes to save bulgaria from turk invasion i rioting and plundering spread panic and fear for dynasty at capital special cable to the examiner london july 22 the horning post's vienna dispatch td-ay says o the allgemeine zeitnng to-night pub lishes a constantinople telegramcontain ing the unexpected report tliat after a long ministerial round it had been de cided to declare war officially against . bulgaiia the turkish army according to this accoiut has been ordered not only to occupy adrianople but to cross the frontier as quickly as possible into bulgarian territory according to what is apparently a re liable telegram from belgrade the ser vian government so far from having in stigated the turkifli advance as is sug gested in some quarters regards it as an atta?k upon the whole balkan league and the cabinets of belgrade athens and gettiuje are preparing to act ac cordingly riots terrori-e sofia the daily express vienna correspond ent sends a graphic story of the situa tion in sofia news lias been received here that the revolutionary movement is rapidly de veloping in sofia rioting and plundering have begun a'.ul fears are entertained for the safetv of the dynasty reports are current that kir.g ferdi nand is aboat 0 attempt lo save the sitt'ation by abdicating ta favor of crown prince iloris but aa emphatic denial at this is given by the i'vlga-ian minister here the king has not been sivtt in the streets of sofia for hm pa fe tulebt however he remains ra u stio'tgly guarded ba and at it is no le rate le h,te ftwm the popular tha truth of w'.i haa hap pened i'ji to bow tltev absolutely hi tha dark â– â€¢- i v tiie disaster which baa arorwh country but the thousands Â„ who ivtve ho trtv bring bow i tho ooar aproarh of he throa hostuo i bova made kuo.v.t ti ammunition is exhausted 1-yr some tibjm past tte - â– '> . has been tap 'â– '.â€¢ dt ver.att ons ue prevail r nil th â€¢ rattro \_\ no la er do further supplies cas it-rue antil is restored it is also helteved the supply nf ammunition is txbaaataa the crowthi of star-ring rngluvae are no longer undor control aad stores ar being plundered be director of pollee bus been wounded ul ittcmptlnf to mam tain order and the deselpline among tha troops is giving away in some eases open mutiny is repotted one officer hav ing beet shot john d g-ives 25 for orphans outing workinpman presents 1 and wom an who washes clothes 50c cle f'laxb ohio july 22.-john d rockefeller wrote secretary caiey of the cleveland automobile club to-day that he will give 23 to the orphans day auto parade next tuesday at the time rockefeller's letter was received a working man found his way te caley's office and pulled a carefully folded dollar bill from h!s pocket this is for the orphans he said a few adnata later a woman who washes clothea xor a living came in with 60 cuuta . __, eiety die trapped in flames as factory is destroyed i , twenty-four bodies are recov ered twenty-six are still in ruins and two are identi fied in binghamton horror young women workers leap to death from fourth story win dows after delaying in be lief that alarm was joke binghamton n y july 22 fifty persons most of them women and girls and all em ployed in the frame tinder box fac i tory of the binghamton clothing ! company died in a fire which swept jthat building this afternoon fifty j more are injured a dozen of them | mortally the girls who had become an noyed at too frequent fire drills thought the alarm which aounded at 2:30 o'clock thiÃŸ pf ternoon was only another drill and refused to heed it the flames had cut off every ave nue of escape to most of the women j employes before they realized that j their lives were actually in danger so far only two of the dead have been identified twenty-four bodies Â„ have been taken from the ruins arid i according to the most careful esti ! mates that can be made at this hour i there are twenty-six bodies in the ruins while many girls lost their lives because they did ot heed the alarm ! of fire it seems certain that the nar row stairway ard inadequate are escapes would n<-t have furnished sufficient arteries of egress in such a fire had the 125 employes re sponded promptly to the call only one-fifth escape less than one-fifth the persons la j that building escaped death or serl ! ous injury the two hospitals of i this city and many homes asd private institutions house the fifty injured around the scene of the cat-irii-j a thousands are to-night wa-.-rfclss t ; firemen and police sad tsÂ«y se wnrtrin-g v way tâ€”fwsg Â»_* at mai by thr Â£*-*-_; t_u s tea*ttr f ss ' dead man j the s-s :_-Â«â– â– * k nhmm jd frwafe f fee aateetas t c*Â»f ty itntw gettnt â€¢ â€¢â– â€¢-.. -- v . : a . -.-__Â» r w-aaac aw svur *' ' i is .>â– ? .â– _â– -_.- .-, ju 1 ' ftr-*bm tmwÂ«Â«)ttttÂ«a <*Â» atoÂ«h i <-*. **â€¢ asjet wmtt tt te yÂ«m Â„'.-..â– â€¢--.' a and d t vmÂ«t lattf }** Â«Â»> ' .-.- â– .> ..-. â€¢.-. i ili'v girls slow to flctf it wm al i mt noon that ktvd bnmtt an enjp of the factory s.iw a wisp of smoke mending the stairway i'roai the firs floor he promptly souuded tho j alarm the private fire alarm system was j installed t o months ago at the sug j gestion of state fire marshal ahearn | and following his instructions tbere had been frequent fire drills â€” too fre qent the girl employes thought the girls many of whom work by the piece when absence from duty means the loss of none too large earnings when the fire test waa : sounded on past occasions and they found it was only a drill expressed til disgust and declared they would not m come out next time some believed it a joke of the management and others declared thc officials wcto perniciously active when the fire alarm throughout ihe factory sounded the girls on tb __ rd Â«Â«Â» fourth floors one hjugred continued on 6th page ist column Chicago and viinity ' gfsfc â€” Â£~"* showers wednesday with cooler by | sylr j3 i night thursday fair ana cooler c 7__\__v_iv \ brisk southerly shifting to north j y jflffi-y west winds i &â„¢ if / bantee oi temperatures yesterday j h v_\\f highest 84 i v j lowest vi i 1 kj average 73 y -___> ' some new opportunities 1 for you to make money i^on at m o b roo lna _ t,.!tn rcal money-mak and m bits will mi rifi e loj si.ti xl account of jztj^jt a q^-lggly 28 -*-* ing chances like ok sale 2b room hou net furnished nnct Â° rentiaz location : tenl llo n.oio a'liut if2tsl , , i ,- ti.lv r-jii reatanrant pay all living ti thlcsparpoonstantl v r ' i â€¢ i gal on in.iu-d will accept btel accii ii_i,autijf ca li of:er ac-otii i ot iny aouth 3010 ukbfeu td t,oâ€ž,ia wb2 _ being offered in ex fob bale â€” ice crca-n partef and candy htnie period'cala etc aritli best fixture aid fouo â€¢ jjr , a j lain doto excel nt broil ; tood reaaon lei amiucf want ad-s arihna 4ilÃŸ oihimet ar lat drexel t â€¢", up-to-date lie crc-im pa lor dis good in 1 j^in voll tnflw that nrsa ill m , r : f â– â– _ tor caah no aetata i'bo.ie ljj j ju k.iiuvv ulcll ertningi austin l4l for sai.k 11,1 more r,nt'""opportun|ty7~i cl good hianv pcoplc t me rt north sidt no aistnta addreaa nh * r . 20 examiner m e â€¢ m â– * are making money v all the time just by watching for and grasping these opportunities in the want ad section of this newspaper well they are you can make money just as well as anybody else by looking for these oppor itunities from day to day as soon as you see one that appeals to you take it before the other fellow gets there v -. j / the e aminer's sworn statement of circulation for may average dumbei of copies ot eacb issue ot tuis publication sold or distributed through the nmils or otherwise to paid subscribers during the month of may daily examiner 241,722 sunday examiner 599 224

Chicago examiner vcl xl no 183 a m wednesday Chicago iuly 23 1913 wednesday registered in it s patent otlice price one cen 1 â„¢~-Â£ *Â£â€¢Â». kenwood bank pays off 1,100 depositors and ends run officers cash all orders for money promise to open doors early to-day to resume turn ing over mcney to customers deposits continue to come in following rumor of collapse and public is assured that savings are not in danger alarmed hy rumors from an unltnown ouree depositors started a run on the kenwood trust & savings bank ut grand boulevard and east forty-seventh street yesterday which lasted until after bank ing hours and kept the streets al'out the bank congested ucitil far into the night the run was met with every confidence by the bank's officers they iald every man or wouiau who presented a pass book kept the bank open until alter hours to leeoaiuiodate as many as possi ble and when the doors closed at 4:15 eveiy person tueu inside was paid bank will open to-day assurance was given to those on the outside tbat the bank will open thts morning at 9 and that every depositor will be paid in full wi.hout hesitation the faith of the otficers in the solidity 1,1 lhe bank is shown by the fact tbat ! they kept an accepting deposits up to the j closing hour though it is a felony to ac ' cept u deposit fo an insolvent hank one of tbj last transactions of the day vvas tle acceptance of a deposit of io.('cÂ«j i.'.v the liordeu condensed milk company the bank bas about 12.041 depositors whose deposits aggrega e more than fi i kio.uoo uf tnese about 1,100 mostly women withdrew their deposits yester day amounting in round numbers lo tl'itl , '**>â€¢ in business eight years the kenwood trust & savings hank is a state institution and has been in | business for eight years the officers j are itesident a k brown vice presi ; deut s a fowler cashier r c kent assistant cashier k e staebling in its last report issuea juue 5 1913 the bank's affairs stood thus resources â€” loans and discounts j1r9621044 stocks and bonds 151 275 ofj 'â– cash due from banks 426,'508!43 ' Â„ ..,.., 2,474,293 87 iliml-tie â€” | paid in capital stock Â« 200.000.00 , buplus and uudmded profits 101 sit is deposits 2.172.4.-.7 87 2,474,203 87 i there is absolutely no reason for this run said president brown last night ; and we have no way to explain bow it ; started received anonymous messages many of our depositors tell us that la the last few days they bave received ! anonymous telephone messages warning tbem tbat the bank was unsafe and that they had better withdraw their money we bave done our best but we have been unable to trace these messages tbat ts a danger which til banks face at all times but we will he open ln the morning at 9 o'clock and we will pay every depositor who makes a dernaud for his money we held a meeting of the directors ; to-night just to give them formal notice that there bas been a run and to ask if they have any criticism or suggestion in regard to the manner in which we are , meeting it they are perfectly satisfied with everything we have done and we are ready now to meet every demand other rumors started there were other rumors than that of the telephone messages afloat one was that a man opened an account witb a check for 3,500 and in a few hours tried to draw i.ooo on it and was refused until the check should have been found good the story was that he went out and spread the report that the bank bud sus j pended payments but cashier kent says j the rumor is unfounded still another rumor was tbat one of i the directors had tried to draw out more : money than the o er ofdeers would al ! low and had then started a rumor tbat the bank was unsafe this story i'resl i dent brown himself says is utterly un i tra all preparations have been made to ac ' commodate as many depositors as may be afraid this morning says cashier kent at thirty minutes notice any time we can have anywhere from 3,(xk),0u0 to jn.000.000 nt our disposal among others the continental & commercial national and the fort dearborn nation l have offered us all the help we may waul they know there is no question aoout om solidity ruth werner the pretty actress and dr otto goldfeld who for love of her gave up his lieuten ancy in the kaiser's army and enlisted in the u s cav alry man 110 years old to-day aurora 111 july 22 james moran a farmer wbo lives a short distance rrom thia place is 110 years old to-morrow i ba la hale and hearty women save mayor in recall election attempt to depose chief execut've of janesville fails by small vote janesville wis july 22 mayor james a fathers was the victor by a narrow margin to-day in wisconsin's first recall electiou of importance uuder the commission form of goverumeut he was elected by 98 votes with a total of over 3,000 votes east more than were ever before voted in a janesville municipal election xiayor fathers received 1,570 votes and his opponent john c nichols 1.47 2 fathers carried three wards the first second and third those chiefly occupied by the church and aristocratic elements while nichols carried the fourth ami fifth wards the homes of the poorer people the election follows the trouble over saloons six mouths ago wheu the fa thers administration started a campa'gu to clean up the town every ward in i the city was canvassed by women's com i mittees in the interest of fathers cousins of czar in automobile wreck grand dukes dimitri and cyril held till da-nage is paid snnclal cnme to tlia examiner copenhagen july 22.-the grand dukes dimitri and cyril cousins of the czar motoring in jutland way collided at high speed with a butcher's cart which was overturned injuring several of the occupants the hakes who were accompanied by two other automobiles carrying several russian and german nobles drove on but the party was stopped at the german frontier and permitted to proceed only on payment of 25 or damages romance leads to heir's exile from germany lieutenant in kaiser's army comes to Chicago and joins u s cavalry spent 32,000 in year ___ __ dr goldfeld forced by father to give up as suitor of pretty actress because his love for a pretty german actress resulted in his squandering an inheritance of 31,000 ln one year pr otto gordon goldfeld scon of a wealthy family a lieutenant in the german cav alry and a graduate of gottingen i'niver sity was forced by his father to come to lhe united states and join the army here as a private the young german leaves for the st louis barracks this morning ruth werner german dancer and singer charmed the young man when in vienna his grandfather bad just died and left him 32,000 within a year this was gone and after numerous appeals i to his father dr goldfeld was cut off and forced to come to f he united slates his father wbo is the vice president of the corporat'on of hamburg told him to give up the girl nis commission in j the army and come to america when dr goldfeld walked into the i federal building yetterday and said he i wanted to enlist in the cavalry be created i quite a stir he wore a neat blue suit i a white alpine hat and with a monocle | white chamois gloves and a light bamboo i walking stick gave the officials quite | a surprise tells of his love i fell in love with the girl explained prl'ate goldfeld last evening and spent all my money on ber she was beautiful if she wanted jewels 1 bought jewels we were ut monre carlo she wanted to pity the games she was beautiful and i loved ter sct"vvr"y sliuuld sbe not be hap.iv we were in paris at the horse show in london and many other places she had automobiles and fine horses and then my money gave out my parents refused to gice me more and my father forced me to come to the united states and try for a commission in th army will i go back responded dr gold feld in answer to a question yes when i get my commission here i will uo back anrl the girl and i will be married but not in til then i must stay in the army here cnlil 1 am a lieutenant it's the open air and oenut'ful country 1 like here more than anything else that s why 1 have come to the west praise for u s soldiers and your soldiers well next to the french dragoons they are about the best iu the world iu my . p'nlon and i have seen the troops of all the larger countries that's why i am enlisting as a private 'â€¢ here for i like the life and will stay anyway until i get my naturalization papers goldfeld is twenty-five years old and has served the last four years in the german cavalry as a lieutenant he is an experienced horseman and says he was the winner of the championship at the international horse show held ln lou don two years ago rid'.ng the horses from bis father's stables jacob goldfeld father of the young army officer besides being vice president of the hamburg corporation is a well known german jurist as i3 also his brother rudolph goldfeld dr go'dfeld will be sent to the govern ment barracks in st ouls this morning as he passed the recruiting officer's ex aminat'on yesterday robbers slay man who tries to save couple jehiel jenner is killed when he runs to rescue of highway men's victims tragedy near lake drive shots attract Chicago avenue firemen efforts to capture bandits are in vain while hurrying to the rescue of a couple wbo had been held up by two ban dits jehiel jenner was fatally shot last night by the highwaymen in the baseball park at east Chicago avenue and the outer drive two bullets passed through the victim one above the other just be low the heart he died twenty m'nntes after he was taken to the policlinic hos pital the couple ln whose behalf jen ner's life was sacrificed were miss vir ginia markham of 17 west huron street and james cleary of 932 la salle avenue resist highwaymen they were walking through the play ground when two young men sprang from behind a tree and ordered them to throw up their hands the young woman obeyed but cleary refused whereupon one of the men struck him on the month with the butt of a revolver knock'ng him down and dislodging a number of his front teeth miss markham screamed it was the scream tbat attracted jenner he had been dozing on one of the benches and he arose to his feet and ran toward the group not more than fifty feet away from him the highwaymen saw him coming and took deliberate aim two shots rung out in quick succession the moment they were fired the two bandits ran north on lake shore drive and disappeared shots attract fireman the souud of the shots and the screams of miss markham were heard in the fire house or engine company 98 in east chicaio avenue assistant chief arthur seyferlich brother of the fire marshal and a dozen firemen followed the sounds and found miss markham bending over the unconscious form of jenner cleary was lying nearby in a dazed and half conscious condition a police ambulance was called and the wounded man hurried to the hospital but in vain miss markham and cleary were taken to the emergency hospital of the east Chicago avenue station where cleary's injuries were dressed and the story nf the attack obtained lieutenant cullinan sent out detectives to scour the park and search the lake shore drive and though twenty arrests were made in the next hour the bandits were not among them the police believe they are the same bandits wbo attacked and beat thomas kinarisba of 672 dearborn aveuue in the baseball park several days ago jenner until there days ago was em ployed hy the schnaack watch service west Chicago avenue and north frank lin street in one of his pockets was found memorandum reading in case of wident notify my mother mrs c li hogmlre ridgefield wash the police sent a wire fo her last night nelson bennett dead west's road builder former partner of senator clark leader n development tacoma wash july 22 nelson ben nett who iliiii suddenly today aged sev enty was the pacific northwest's fore most railroad builder in 1888 be finished the northern pa ilfic's stamped 1 tunnel netting hlui b*llllo 000 ln 18 be owned the tacomu ledger ami the hotel tacoma lie losl everything in the panic and started anew lie hauled the first ma chinery tutu untte was senator clark's partner in freighting and built the first treat railways at butte and tacoma lie>sidfÃŸ being idterested iu much other development he bit a fortune estimated at ii half million dollars sues for 200,000 godair left typist mother alleges stenographer used undue imluenc over son st loi'ik july 22 mrs harriet a tlodnlr wife of w h godalr of chi cago and toother o arthur u godalr a commission merchant killed in an auto mobile accident 111 rch 1 filed suit to day asking that his will in which he left a large part of a 20i>,0go estate to his stenographer miss irene a gormley be set aside his wife received only a small share she alleges the stenographer used undue influence over bim too many kisses and buns discourage wife mrs schwanke says she loves them but they're monotonous kisses and buns for breakfast kisses and buns for tea but too man kisses and too many buns will end in monotony baltimore md june 22.-kisses and buns for breakfast kisses and buns for luncheon kisses and buns for dinner this has been the menu says mrs bosie schwanke ever since ber marriage to frederick schwanke ou july 7 mrs schwanke is the sister of mrs theresa deems the famous unklssed wife it's not that i don't love my husband said mrs schwanke 1 do and love bis kisses too but buns are too monoto nous schwanke will be given a hearing to morrow marine guard asked for chinese resort ! diplomat at peking wants u s detachment at kuling washington july 22,-edward t williams the american charge d affaires at peking has asked admiral nicholson commanding the united states asiatic fleet to send a marine guard to kuling the foreign summer resort in central china his request indicates that mr williams is carrying out a joint policy similar to the international agreeinent by which about olie hundred marines form part of an international gi'trd at peking it is expected that admiral nicholson will send from twenty-five to forty ma rines as it is evident that mr williams helieves that there should be no reduc tion of the marine guard at peking london hears t r is to go in vaudeville sketch prints he is to get 2,000 a week for lectures special cable to the examiner london july 28 the london daily sketch prints a statement that colonel roosevelt bus signed a contract for a tour of the australian vaudeville ci.i-uit at 2 oug a week to lecture on sociological subjects he hits been booked by hugh mcln osh the noted australian fight pro moter it adtls the former president is to appear n talks of fifteen to thirty minutes new york july 22 dr i.ymiiu ab liclt when asked tc night about this re port said vou may be sure this is absolute nonsense kit carson arrested for deserting wife son of pioneer scout who killed mother-in-law in trouble la junta colo july a.'.-kit carson aon of the well-known pioneer scout of tbat name was arrested yesterday for wife desertion he left his wife and tive children all under sixteen years of age three weeks ago ten years ago carson shot and killed his mother-in-law mrs j h richardson and wounded bis father in-law the case was thrown out because three terms of court bad been allowed to pass without auy action belug taken anthony brady is dead financier succumbs after illness in london hotel special cable to the e aminer london july 22 anthony n brady the widely known american financier and for years head of the brooklyn rapid transit company in xew york died at the carlton hotel bert late to-night mr b.idj was more tbac ieveotj jeara old union trainmen win arbitration on erie president underwood announces agreement to abide by decision new york july 22 the 82,000 union conductors and trainmen on the eastern railroads who are fighting for a 20 per cent increase in wages won a signal vic tory to-day when the management of the erie ra.lroad agreed to abide by the decision of the proposd board of arbitra tion the mediators informed vice president j c stewart of the erie that they saw no way of averting the big strike unless the management of the road would make the coucessiou concerning arbitration de manded by the uuious to-night the mediators were informed tbat the follow ing dispatch had been received from i'resident underwood the erie railroad will accept any award made under the newlands act in case an advance iu wages in granted the erie purposes to ask the employes to defer the effective date until january 1 1915 signed f d underwood when a b garretson and w u lee the union leaders learned of the conces sions made by president underwood tbey issued this joint statement sue-h au arrangement is highly satis factor yto us rebates by allowances on tap-line roads to be abolished fifty to one hundred million dol-i lars will be added to revenues of railroads by decision will obviate rate increase necessity interstate commerce commission will refuse to grant raise in rates to issue order that will strip trusts of special favors washington july 22 the answer of the interstate commerce commission to the appmcation of the railroads east of the mississippi ard north of the ohio and potomac rivers for per mission to make a general increase of 5 per cent in freight rates will be as follows 1 the application will be denied 2 all railroads will be ordered to discontinue making allowances to certain favored big industrial combinations the effect of this will be to re lieve the general public of the neces sity of paying the additional 42 000,000 a year which the railroads in official classification territory are asking for arid to strip certain big corporations of a sum ranging be tween 150,000,000 and 100,000,000 annually may not prosecute the necessity of such an order has been under consideration by the commission for some time during the past few months it has secretly made an investigation to determine i just the extent to which the practice of making allowances to indus trial short line railroads owned by manufacturing concerns is prevalent it is now in possession of the names of the firms that receive these allowances or rebates or dis criminatory rates and in addition it has the names of the railroads that pay them the amounts re ceived by the favored industrial cor porations and something of the ex tent to which the practice injures the competing manufacturers who are not in a position to enter into such arrangements ln a large number of instances it is claimed the practice amounts to extortion the railroads aie com pelled by the deniuiuis of compea tion to make allowances to the tnau uiacturer for his part iu transfer ring his product over his own iu siguificant trackage to the junction wneie the regular railitmu lakes up his cars 17,000,000 for increase where several raiirouus an bid ding for such a manufacturer's business the one which makes iiie most liberal allowance usually gÂ»ts the freight ln view mainly of this fact it is ejspectul that the answer which the commission will give the railroads application will meet with their ap proval and co-operation and will do away with the most important of ex isting improper practices in the rail road dusiness without the necessity of prose ution the railroads are asking for the 5 per cent increase on the ground that they must have increased rev enue to pay their large operating ex penses and particularly to pay the higher wages demanded by their em ployes â€” a demand which almost pre cipitated a paralyzing strike a few days ago and which is now being arbitrated under a special act of con gress in rough figures the 5 per cent increase asked by the railroads in the territory east of Chicago would add 42,000,000 to their rev enue the recent demands of their em ployes for wages equal to those paid railroad workmen in the western and southern territory would take 17 000,(100 of that amount under the order which the inter j state commerce commission will ia 1 statistics and facts of fatal factory fire known dead 24 missing and believed to be in ruins 26 identified dead white mary thirty four years old both legs broken and inter nally injured died at hospital fulmer ellen twen ty-three years old fa tally burned died in hospital property loss â€” 300000 is estimated as damage aone to binghamton clothing company and adjoining buildings cause â€” gasoline stored under the only stairway in the build ing is one theory as to how fire started responsibility â€” too fre quent fire drills are blamed for heavy loss of life the girls thinking the alarm yes terday was a joke foes to save bulgaria from turk invasion i rioting and plundering spread panic and fear for dynasty at capital special cable to the examiner london july 22 the horning post's vienna dispatch td-ay says o the allgemeine zeitnng to-night pub lishes a constantinople telegramcontain ing the unexpected report tliat after a long ministerial round it had been de cided to declare war officially against . bulgaiia the turkish army according to this accoiut has been ordered not only to occupy adrianople but to cross the frontier as quickly as possible into bulgarian territory according to what is apparently a re liable telegram from belgrade the ser vian government so far from having in stigated the turkifli advance as is sug gested in some quarters regards it as an atta?k upon the whole balkan league and the cabinets of belgrade athens and gettiuje are preparing to act ac cordingly riots terrori-e sofia the daily express vienna correspond ent sends a graphic story of the situa tion in sofia news lias been received here that the revolutionary movement is rapidly de veloping in sofia rioting and plundering have begun a'.ul fears are entertained for the safetv of the dynasty reports are current that kir.g ferdi nand is aboat 0 attempt lo save the sitt'ation by abdicating ta favor of crown prince iloris but aa emphatic denial at this is given by the i'vlga-ian minister here the king has not been sivtt in the streets of sofia for hm pa fe tulebt however he remains ra u stio'tgly guarded ba and at it is no le rate le h,te ftwm the popular tha truth of w'.i haa hap pened i'ji to bow tltev absolutely hi tha dark â– â€¢- i v tiie disaster which baa arorwh country but the thousands Â„ who ivtve ho trtv bring bow i tho ooar aproarh of he throa hostuo i bova made kuo.v.t ti ammunition is exhausted 1-yr some tibjm past tte - â– '> . has been tap 'â– '.â€¢ dt ver.att ons ue prevail r nil th â€¢ rattro \_\ no la er do further supplies cas it-rue antil is restored it is also helteved the supply nf ammunition is txbaaataa the crowthi of star-ring rngluvae are no longer undor control aad stores ar being plundered be director of pollee bus been wounded ul ittcmptlnf to mam tain order and the deselpline among tha troops is giving away in some eases open mutiny is repotted one officer hav ing beet shot john d g-ives 25 for orphans outing workinpman presents 1 and wom an who washes clothes 50c cle f'laxb ohio july 22.-john d rockefeller wrote secretary caiey of the cleveland automobile club to-day that he will give 23 to the orphans day auto parade next tuesday at the time rockefeller's letter was received a working man found his way te caley's office and pulled a carefully folded dollar bill from h!s pocket this is for the orphans he said a few adnata later a woman who washes clothea xor a living came in with 60 cuuta . __, eiety die trapped in flames as factory is destroyed i , twenty-four bodies are recov ered twenty-six are still in ruins and two are identi fied in binghamton horror young women workers leap to death from fourth story win dows after delaying in be lief that alarm was joke binghamton n y july 22 fifty persons most of them women and girls and all em ployed in the frame tinder box fac i tory of the binghamton clothing ! company died in a fire which swept jthat building this afternoon fifty j more are injured a dozen of them | mortally the girls who had become an noyed at too frequent fire drills thought the alarm which aounded at 2:30 o'clock thiÃŸ pf ternoon was only another drill and refused to heed it the flames had cut off every ave nue of escape to most of the women j employes before they realized that j their lives were actually in danger so far only two of the dead have been identified twenty-four bodies Â„ have been taken from the ruins arid i according to the most careful esti ! mates that can be made at this hour i there are twenty-six bodies in the ruins while many girls lost their lives because they did ot heed the alarm ! of fire it seems certain that the nar row stairway ard inadequate are escapes would nâ– ? .â– _â– -_.- .-, ju 1 ' ftr-*bm tmwÂ«Â«)ttttÂ«a ' .-.- â– .> ..-. â€¢.-. i ili'v girls slow to flctf it wm al i mt noon that ktvd bnmtt an enjp of the factory s.iw a wisp of smoke mending the stairway i'roai the firs floor he promptly souuded tho j alarm the private fire alarm system was j installed t o months ago at the sug j gestion of state fire marshal ahearn | and following his instructions tbere had been frequent fire drills â€” too fre qent the girl employes thought the girls many of whom work by the piece when absence from duty means the loss of none too large earnings when the fire test waa : sounded on past occasions and they found it was only a drill expressed til disgust and declared they would not m come out next time some believed it a joke of the management and others declared thc officials wcto perniciously active when the fire alarm throughout ihe factory sounded the girls on tb __ rd Â«Â«Â» fourth floors one hjugred continued on 6th page ist column Chicago and viinity ' gfsfc â€” Â£~"* showers wednesday with cooler by | sylr j3 i night thursday fair ana cooler c 7__\__v_iv \ brisk southerly shifting to north j y jflffi-y west winds i &â„¢ if / bantee oi temperatures yesterday j h v_\\f highest 84 i v j lowest vi i 1 kj average 73 y -___> ' some new opportunities 1 for you to make money i^on at m o b roo lna _ t,.!tn rcal money-mak and m bits will mi rifi e loj si.ti xl account of jztj^jt a q^-lggly 28 -*-* ing chances like ok sale 2b room hou net furnished nnct Â° rentiaz location : tenl llo n.oio a'liut if2tsl , , i ,- ti.lv r-jii reatanrant pay all living ti thlcsparpoonstantl v r ' i â€¢ i gal on in.iu-d will accept btel accii ii_i,autijf ca li of:er ac-otii i ot iny aouth 3010 ukbfeu td t,oâ€ž,ia wb2 _ being offered in ex fob bale â€” ice crca-n partef and candy htnie period'cala etc aritli best fixture aid fouo â€¢ jjr , a j lain doto excel nt broil ; tood reaaon lei amiucf want ad-s arihna 4ilÃŸ oihimet ar lat drexel t â€¢", up-to-date lie crc-im pa lor dis good in 1 j^in voll tnflw that nrsa ill m , r : f â– â– _ tor caah no aetata i'bo.ie ljj j ju k.iiuvv ulcll ertningi austin l4l for sai.k 11,1 more r,nt'""opportun|ty7~i cl good hianv pcoplc t me rt north sidt no aistnta addreaa nh * r . 20 examiner m e â€¢ m â– * are making money v all the time just by watching for and grasping these opportunities in the want ad section of this newspaper well they are you can make money just as well as anybody else by looking for these oppor itunities from day to day as soon as you see one that appeals to you take it before the other fellow gets there v -. j / the e aminer's sworn statement of circulation for may average dumbei of copies ot eacb issue ot tuis publication sold or distributed through the nmils or otherwise to paid subscribers during the month of may daily examiner 241,722 sunday examiner 599 224